Oil Whiplash: WTI Crashes to $95, Rebounds to $101 in 24 Hours
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What Happened
April 8: WTI crude oil dropped more than 15% to approximately $95/barrel after President Trump announced a two-week postponement of his threatened strikes on Iranian civilian infrastructure (source). Markets interpreted the delay as de-escalation.
April 9: WTI rebounded 7.28% to $101.28/barrel (source) as traders reassessed the postponement as a pause rather than a resolution. The Strait of Hormuz remains disrupted.
A $6+ swing in 24 hours is extreme volatility by any measure.
Ecuador's Dual Exposure
Export Revenue (Benefits from High Prices)
Ecuador produces approximately 470,000 barrels/day, most exported as Oriente blend. At $100+ WTI:
- Government oil revenue significantly exceeds the $65-70/bbl fiscal framework assumption
- IMF program targets become easier to meet
- The fiscal deficit narrows
Consumer Fuel Prices (Hurt by High Prices)
Ecuador's fuel band system passes international oil prices to consumers, capped at 5%/month:
- Extra/Ecopaís heading to $3.03/gallon on April 12 (source)
- Diesel projected at $2.96/gallon
- Transport, food, and delivery costs follow with a 2-4 week lag
What This Means for Expats
- Your fuel costs are going up regardless of day-to-day volatility. The April 12 adjustment is based on the monthly average, not single-day prices. One crash day doesn't save you
- Ecuador's government is doing well financially from high oil — which means better-funded services, security operations, and infrastructure
- The geopolitical risk remains. Trump postponed, not cancelled. If the Iran situation escalates again, oil could spike further. If it resolves, prices could drop significantly — and fuel prices would follow with a one-month lag
- Dollarization insulates you from currency effects but not from local price inflation driven by fuel costs
Sources: FX Daily Report, Trading Economics, Fortune
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